Cooper comments that the woman’s healing came intuitively, and her study of elephants turned into weeks of close observation and involvement. This rare and precious fellowship among people and elephants became an adventure that completely re-directed her. Through her church in London she became a social worker, eventually completed a low degree, and worker for two charities advising young homeless adults. This illustrates how wildlife adventure experiences can so easily straddle the world of adventure of mind and body – an embracing therapy. Adventure therapy is indeed a specialist field that user nature and outdoor experiential activities for individual, group or family psychotherapy or counseling (Beard and Wilson, 2002). And wildlife can often form a significant ingredient in the therapeutic process.